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8/9/2019 Week 5 - Clinical Nutrition
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Dr Jo‐Anne Murray
(PhD, MSc, PgDip, PgCert, BSc (hons), BHSII, RNutr)Senior lecturer in animal husbandry and nutrition
Equine
nutrition
Clinical nutrition
Learning Outcomes
By the end of this section you should be able to:
• Discuss rations for horses with specific nutrition‐related disorders
Clinical nutrition
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Content
• Nutritional management of:
– Horses/ponies susceptible to laminitis
– Obesity
– Horses/ponies with weight loss
– Older horses/ponies
Clinical
nutrition
Laminitis
• “Barley disease” – starch overload
• Pasture‐associated laminitis – ↑WSC
• Survey 1990s of cases of laminitis in UK:
– 61 % at grass
– 30 % combined
– 9 % stabled
• US survey: 46 % of cases linked with pasture
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Laminitis – pasture associated
• Turning out certain horses/ponies on to
– “lush pasture” (actively photosynthetic)
– “stressed” pasture (↓ environmental condions for growth)
– Especially spring/summer
• Seems to trigger laminitis
– Ingest ↑ WSC
• Recurrent in certain individuals
Clinical
nutrition
Laminitis – pasture associated
• Trigger = ↑ WSC containing pastures
• Spring/summer
0
50
100
150
200
250
March May August October
W S C c o n t e n t ( g / k g D M )
Studies reported highest
incidence of laminitis in May
Longland, 2007
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Laminitis – pasture associated
• WSC levels = ↑ variable
• Varies throughout day
0
50
100
150
200
250
6:00 AM 9:00 AM 11:00 AM 6:00 PM 11:00 PM
Time of Day
W S C c o n t e n t ( g / k g D M )
Longland, 2007
Clinical
nutrition
Laminitis – pasture associated
• Grass species = ↑ variable
– Ryegrass > fescue > cocksfoot > timothy
• Plant part = important
– Stems > leaves
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Laminitis – pasture associated
• ↑WSC pastures may influence laminis in other ways
– May promote insulin resistance
– Insulin peaks similar to ↑ starch diets
– ↓ threshold for laminis to be triggered
• Other threshold lowering factors may be involved – Obesity
– Genetic predisposition
Clinical
nutrition
Obesity and insulin resistance
• Man
– Regional adiposity (visceral) = linked to diabetes and heart disease
• Horses/ponies
– Regional adiposity (crest) linked with laminitis
• Laminitis also linked to:
– Generalised obesity
– Hyperinsulinemia
– Hyperleptinemia
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Obesity in horses
• No universally accepted definition of obesity in horses/ponies
– Henneke BCS = 8 & 9
– 7 = overweight
• BCS doesn’t account for regional adiposity
– May signify ↑ risk of disease
• But: – Not all horses/ponies that are obese develop laminitis
– Not all obese animals are IR
– Some “acceptable conditioned” animals are IR
– Other possible risk factors may exist
Clinical
nutrition
Laminitis – avoidance
• Consider zero grazing
– Use suitable forage alternative
• Turnout when fructan/WSC likely at lowest – Late at night to early morning
– Remove from pasture by mid‐morning
0
50
100
150
200
250
6:00 AM 9:00 AM 11:00 AM 6:00 PM 11:00 PM
Time of Day
W S C c o n t e n t ( g / k g D M )
X X
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Laminitis – avoidance
• Do not graze pastures not well managed
– Maintain young leafy swards – not mature stemmy pastures
• Avoid/restrict turnout in spring and autumn
• No not turnout on pastures expose to ↓ temperatures
– e.g. frosts followed by warm, bright sunny days
• Do not graze pastures during/following drought
Clinical
nutrition
Laminitis – avoidance
• Grazing muzzles
– Ensure water intakes
– Behavioural issues
• Strip grazing
• Mowing and removing cuttings
• Turnout in an arena (provide alternative forage)
• Rotate paddocks
– Other species (cattle/sheep) ‐ keeps grass at appropriate height
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Laminitis – avoidance
• Forage – base the diet on forage
• For horses with history of laminitis – Analyse forage – feed forage with 3 hrs to help WSC content
– Soaking variable – best to feed WSC forage
• Broad‐spectrum vit/min supplement (if no or conc)
• No evidence to suggest magnesium laminitis
Clinical
nutrition
Laminitis – avoidance
• Supplementary feeding – most won’t need this
• Avoid feeds that exacerbate IR – cereals & ↑ NSC pasture
• Use oil instead of cereals (unless contraindications) – Introduce oil gradually into the diet
– Add Vit E at 100‐150 iu/100 ml oil
– No more than 100 ml oil/ 100 kg BW
No more than 500 ml oil
for 500 kg horse
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Laminitis – avoidance
• If Cereal grains are fed – Need to be processed by cooking (e.g. micronisation)
– Increases SI starch digestibility
– Restrict meal sizes to
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Obesity – weight management
• “Eat less” and “exercise more”
• General principles – Total removal of ↑ calorie feedstuff s (cereals & oils)
– No excessive feeding of treats (carrots, apples etc)
– Assess workload – be realistic about workload
– Set realistic goals
– Gradual dietary changes – avoid prolonged periods of fasting – At target weight ‐ develop a weight maintenance programme
– Long term commitment – 4 to 6 months
Clinical
nutrition
Weight management – horse stabled
• Removal from pasture = only way to control intake
• Studies shown no change in BW with restricted access to pasture – 12 hrs restricted access – ↑ grass consumpon during grazing period
– Estimated ponies can eat 40 % of daily DMI in 3 hrs at pasture
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Weight management – horse stabled
• Advisable to begin at 2 % BW/day for 6‐8 weeks
• If weight loss by feed restricon alone = ↓ feed provision
• ↓ to 1.5 % of current BW/day for 8 weeks – Divide ration into 3 to 4 feeds per day
– Use haynets with small holes
2 % = 10 kg/day for a 500 kg horse
1.5 % = 7.5 kg/day for a 500 kg horse
Clinical
nutrition
Weight management – horse kept at grass
• Restrict access to small well managed paddocks
• Ensure free from toxic plants (hungry animals ↑ eat them)
• House for significant portions of the day (feed forage)
• Strip graze
• Use grazing muzzle
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• Not all animals lose weight at same rate
• BCS not useful for short‐term monitoring (
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• A number of contributing factors may be present
– e.g. marginal diet and poor dentition
• Considerations
– teeth
– Anthelmintic programme
– Evaluate the diet
Horses/ponies with weight loss
Clinical
nutrition
• Absence of disease
– ↑ intake of digesble nutrients
– Diet depends on extent of weight loss & age (growing)
• Severe cases (
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• Re‐feeding
– ↑ fat NSC
– Lucerne ‐ ↑protein & NSC
– Grass hay – soak for 3 hours
– Small (0.5 kg) frequent meals ( 6 x daily) of forage
– Gradual ↑ in amount over 10 days
– Then gradually add ↑ energy dense feeds
– Maintain weight mid‐point b/w current & desired BW
– Then ↑ feed gradually to reach desired weight
– Oil is good – needs to be added gradually
– Check electrolyte intake
Horses/ponies with weight loss
Clinical
nutrition
• Some studies shown digestibility
– CP, phosphorus & fibre digestibility
• Others shown no difference
• Attributed to:
– Damage to large colon (chronic parasitism)
– Poor dentition
• Thus – can assume older, healthy horses can be fed as per normal adult
horse guidelines
Older horses
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• Weight loss is most common nutritional problem
• Can be several causes
– Dental abnormalities
– Renal and hepatic disease
– Cushing’s disease
Older horses ‐ problems
Clinical
nutrition
• Incidence or periodontal disease
– One study: 60 % in horses over 15 years
– Second study: similar incidence in horses over 20 years
• Dietary management
– Grass – easier to chew than long‐stem hay
– Turnout is desirable
– Feed ↑ quality forage (↑ leaf ‐to‐stem ratio)
– Chop if required
Older horses ‐ problems
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• Severe cases
– Commercial senior feed
– Mixed with ↑ fibre cube (alfalfa pellets)
– Soak before feeding (warm water ‐ ↑palatability)
– ↑ volume of feed – might daily DM intake
– Oil can be added (if not in commercial feed)
– Add Vit E if oil used (100 IU/ 100 ml oil)
– Small, frequent feeds
Older horses ‐ problems
Clinical
nutrition
• Oen ↑quality and/or quanty of feed – can ↑ intake and BCS
• Some horses ↑ intake if fed with companion horses
• Soak feed and warm• Add molasses or pureed apple
• Flavourings – crushed ginger cookies
• Older horses pecking order in field
– Feed separately to ↑ intake
• Older horses may have OA
– Feed from raised container to ↑ intake – OA of forelimbs
– Raised container for hay (no haynet) – OA of neck
Older horses – other considerations
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Clinical nutrition ‐ conclusion
• Diet can impact on development of disease
• Good dietary management can prevent disease
• Dietary management can improve health
• Diet is integral to health
• Prevention is better than a cure!
Clinical
nutrition
Thank you
for
listening
Clinical nutrition
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